PSI - Issue 3

Roberto Serpieri et al. / Procedia Structural Integrity 3 (2017) 441–449 Serpieri et al. / Structural Integrity Procedia 00 (2017) 000–000

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appreciated by considering the results shown in Figure 8(a), where the tangential stress, against a prescribed sliding relative displacement in different directions L  of the plane, is reported for the case of 5 MPa confining pressure. The result can be even better appreciated in Figure 8(b), where a polar plot of the fracture energy is shown for each direction of the (macro-scale) interface, in the case of no confining pressure. For the detailed description of the 3D CZM model, the reader is referred to the paper by Albarella et al. (2015) and by Serpieri et al. (2017), where extensive numerical results and sensitive analyses for cases of monotonic and cyclic loading, using a wide range of RME geometries, are reported and critically discussed.

Fig. 8. Nearly isotropic response of the RME of Figure 2(b) for (a) 5MPa of confining pressure and (b) no confining pressure.

5. Conclusions

The cohesive-zone models (CZMs) proposed by Serpieri and Alfano (2011) has been theoretically revisited and analysed by Serpieri et al. (2015a) and further refined in (Serpieri et al., 2015b) for 2D cases. These models, and their extension to a general 3D model addressed by Albarella et al. (2015), represent an original and effective method of capturing the complex interaction between damage, friction and interlocking, based on a simple yet physically well justified multi-scale approach. In its last version proposed by Serpieri et al. (2015b), the model also accounts for the finite depth of the fracture surface asperities and their wear and degradation, particularly in the case of cyclic loading. The predicting capabilities of the model have been experimentally validated against a number of experimental tests of different nature, conducted and reported by different authors for problems involving structural interfaces made of different materials. While further validation is certainly useful, the effectiveness of the model is confirmed by the fact that the model input parameters have a clear physical meaning and their calibration performed for the aforementioned experimental validation always led to values which are well within the expected range. Furthermore, it is the authors’ opinion that the clear physical meaning of the input parameters also facilitates the calibration itself and the interpretation of its results. The capability of the model of capturing the mode-mixity dependence of the total (measured) fracture energy by using a single value of the ‘decohesion’ energy, in modes I and II, on each elementary plane of the geometry of the micro-scale, is a remarkable feature as it is based on the effective decoupling of the energy dissipated by friction and the amount of energy needed to achieve de-cohesion. This seems a significant step forward towards the possibility of characterizing mode-II, mode-III and mixed-mode fracture of materials and interfaces through parameters that can be considered as material properties, or, in other words, that are not dependent on the size and geometry of the structure or on the loading and boundary conditions.

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